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Shelby Ming, John B O'Hara, Carolina Posada, A-52 Evolving Cognitive and Neuropsychiatric Sequelae of Ruptured Arteriovenous Malformation Following Neurosurgical Intervention, Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, Volume 36, Issue 6, September 2021, Pages 1093–1094, https://doi.org/10.1093/arclin/acab062.70
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Abstract
Arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are tangled masses of arteries and veins of congenital origin. AVMs are rare (~4.3% in the general population) and symptomatic cases are rarer still (0.1–1%). AVMs account for strokes in 1–2% of cases. We present the case of a 59-year-old, right-handed, Caucasian male, with nine years of formal education, who was evaluated as an inpatient following a ruptured AVM.
Patient with known history of AVM (Figure 1) presented with headache and new onset seizure. Computerized tomography (CT) revealed rupture of an AVM at the right temporal-occipital junction, with resulting intraparenchymal hemorrhage within the right parieto-occipital lobe and the right ventricular system and 0.8 cm left midline shift (Figure 2). The patient underwent emergency craniotomy for evacuation of intracerebral hematoma, resection of AVM, and placement of right external ventricular drain (EVD). Electroencephalograom (EEG) revealed focal cortical dysfunction over the right hemisphere and moderate encephalopathy.
(Table 1). Neuropsychological evaluation six days following emergency craniotomy revealed primary impairment in visuoperceptual and visuoconstructional skills (including left neglect; Figures 3 & 4), impairments in working memory, learning/memory of verbal information (with intact recognition), as well as impairment in aspects of language (semantic fluency). These were accompanied by dense anosagnosia pertaining to cognitive deficits, but intact insight related to his hospitalization.
This is a rare case of symptomatic AVM with neuropsychological evaluation data highlighting the associated evolving cognitive (e.g., left neglect and visuoperceptual disturbance) and neuropsychiatric deficits (e.g., dense anosagnosia) in the context of recent neurosurgical interventions (e.g., evacuation of hemorrhage, placement of EVD, etc.).
